2 resultados para selective medium

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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Three sublines of NIH 3T3 cells had the properties of non-neoplastic, preneoplastic, and neoplastic cells, respectively. The closer the cells were to neoplastic behavior, characterized by continuing growth at high density, the slower they multiplied at lower density. Under the conditions of high population density and low calf serum concentration used in the assay for transformed focus formation, the transformed or neoplastic cells were much more sensitive to killing by methotrexate (MTX) than were non-neoplastic cells in the same culture. This differential sensitivity of neoplastic cells was far more pronounced in molecular, cellular, and developmental biology medium 402 (MCDB 402) than in DMEM. It is associated with the presence in MCDB 402 of folinic acid, known clinically as leucovorin, which is a reduced form of the folic acid present in DMEM. Although leucovorin had been shown to selectively spare normal bone marrow and intestine in animals from the killing effect of MTX on tumor cells, we demonstrate the preferential killing of neoplastic over non-neoplastic cells of the same derivation. Neither neoplastic nor non-neoplastic cells were killed once they had stopped multiplying at their respective saturation densities. The development of the light foci characteristic of the preneoplastic cells was less sensitive to MTX than the formation of the dense foci produced by the fully neoplastic cells. The system should serve as a valuable model to establish basic principles and optimal conditions for selective killing of neoplastic cells by chemotherapeutic drugs.

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Cocaine exposure in utero causes severe alterations in the development of the central nervous system. To study the basis of these teratogenic effects in vitro, we have used cocultures of neurons and glial cells from mouse embryonic brain. Cocaine selectively affected embryonic neuronal cells, causing first a dramatic reduction of both number and length of neurites and then extensive neuronal death. Scanning electron microscopy demonstrated a shift from a multipolar neuronal pattern towards bi- and unipolarity prior to the rounding up and eventual disappearance of the neurons. Selective toxicity of cocaine on neurons was paralleled by a concomitant decrease of the culture content in microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2), a neuronal marker measured by solid-phase immunoassay. These effects on neurons were reversible when cocaine was removed from the culture medium. In contrast, cocaine did not affect astroglial cells and their glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) content. Thus, in embryonic neuronal-glial cell cocultures, cocaine induces major neurite perturbations followed by neuronal death without affecting the survival of glial cells. Provided similar neuronal alterations are produced in the developing human brain, they could account for the qualitative or quantitative defects in neuronal pathways that cause a major handicap in brain function following in utero exposure to cocaine.